
Met Office: Extreme weather the UK's new normal
Climate change is bringing more severe weather events like storms and flooding - and inevitably the country's changing climate is having an impact on the natural world, with some species suffering.The report focuses on 2024, when the UK experienced its second warmest February, warmest May, warmest spring, fifth warmest December, and fifth warmest winter since records began in 1884.The Met Office highlights that some of these records have already been surpassed in 2025 - more evidence of this trend towards more extreme weather.This summer many parts of the country are in the throes of their third heatwave with very warm weather reaching into Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland as well as southern England.The first hosepipe ban of the year was imposed in Yorkshire last week following England's warmest June on record, which came after the country's driest and sunniest spring for 132 years.Yorkshire and the north west of England were declared in official drought by the Environment Agency in June. At least one region is expected to be added to the list when the UK's National Drought Group meets on Tuesday.Mike Kendon, a Met Office climate scientist and lead author of the State of the UK Climate report, said: "Every year that goes by is another upward step on the warming trajectory our climate is on. "Observations show that our climate in the UK is now notably different to what it was just a few decades ago."
Wetter as well as hotter weather
As an island squeezed between the vast Atlantic Ocean and continental Europe, the UK sits at the intersection of a whole series of major air masses. That's why the country's climate is so changeable and that variability also makes mapping some climate changes more difficult.Rainfall patterns fluctuate much more than temperature, the Met Office says, but it finds that, as well as warming up, the UK is also getting wetter, with rainfall increasing significantly during the winter. Between October and March, rainfall in 2015-2024 was 16% higher than in 1961–1990, it says.Behind all these changes is the relentless rise in average temperatures driven by climate change, the Met Office says. Global temperatures have risen by over 1.3C since the industrial revolution as humans continue to release carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere at an unprecedented rate.The Met Office calculates that the UK is warming at a rate of around 0.25C per decade, with the 2015-2024 period 1.24C warmer than the period between 1961-1990.As the UK's national weather service, the Met Office is the custodian of the Central England Temperature record, the longest running weather record in the world, based on measurements taken using thermometers and other instruments. It spans from 1659 to the present and it shows that recent warming has far exceeded any observed temperatures in over 300 years.The last three years have been in the UK's top five warmest on record, with 2024 the fourth warmest year in records dating back to 1884.Even a small shift in temperatures can significantly increase the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events, as the graph below shows.Look how, as the distribution of temperatures shifts, those that were previously extreme are brought into the range and new extremes become significantly more likely.
We are often talking about how it used to be colder back in the day. Well that is borne out by the Met Office's data. We really are getting increasingly fewer cold days. The Met Office says there were 14 fewer days with air frosts – when the air temperature falls below zero - in the last decade compared to the period 1931 to 1990.
Flood risk growing
As in recent years, floods and storms caused the worst severe weather damage to the UK last year.A series of named storms that pummelled the UK beginning in the autumn of 2023 helped cause widespread flooding in early January. That contributed to the wettest winter half year – October 2023 to March 2024 - in over 250 years.Areas particularly badly hit by flooding included eastern Scotland, Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire and the West Midlands, with some places recording three to four times their usual rainfall for September.In early January of 2024 the Royal Shakespeare Company had to cancel performances for two evenings in a row because of flooding in Stratford-upon-Avon. In November a wall collapsed in Tenbury Wells in Worcestershire after water in a local brook rose, flooding the town centre.Met Office Chief Scientist Professor Stephen Belcher said the evidence of the impacts climate change is already bringing showed the urgent need for the UK to adapt to cope with future extremes."The climate is likely to continue to change, and we need to prepare for the impacts this will have on the weather we experience," he said.For the first time this report highlights that UK sea level is rising faster than the global average.As sea levels continue to rise around the UK, the risk of flooding is only going to increase further, says Dr Svetlana Jevrejeva from the National Oceanography Centre. "We know from historical events it is only a matter of time until the UK is next in the path of a major storm surge event," she said.
Nature is changing with the climate
Inevitably the UK's changing climate is having an impact on the natural world.Spring in 2024 was earlier than the average for 12 of the 13 spring events on record and was the earliest in the series from 1999 for both frogspawn appearing and blackbirds nesting.The timing of seasonal activity in plants and animals is known as phenology and is collected by a network of volunteers coordinated by the Nature's Calendar citizen science project.The changing pattern of natural events can have a huge impact. Dormice and hedgehogs – two of the UK's most threatened mammals – are particularly affected when the weather is very warm, for example.
Fruits and nuts ripen earlier in hot weather and that means fewer are available in the autumn when these animals are trying to build up the reserves of fat they need to see them through winter.At the Alice Holt forest research centre outside London they are investigating how our trees and forests can be made more resilient to the country's future climate. The sad fact is that many of our current tree species just can't cope, says Dr Gail Atkinson, the head of Climate Change Science at the centre. "After a drought you can see reduced growth, so trees aren't growing as we would expect them to," she says. "If you look up in the canopy you can see the leaves looking a little bit raggedy and there are other signs of stress as you're walking through the woodland including extreme examples you might find that the trees have actually died."Studies at Alice Holt show one species that could do well as the UK continues to get hotter and wetter are coastal redwoods from California. It has been growing trees from different latitudes for the last 60 years to see how they fare in the UK climate.It means that, in the decades to come, the world's tallest trees could become a common sight here in the UK.
Sign up for our Future Earth newsletter to keep up with the latest climate and environment stories with the BBC's Justin Rowlatt. Outside the UK? Sign up to our international newsletter here.
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The Guardian
35 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Feel v theory at the Open: MacIntyre and DeChambeau try to navigate Portrush chaos
You could feel the bad weather closing in on Royal Portrush during Friday morning. The atmosphere around the links grew stickier, and sweatier, every minute, and soon enough everyone was peeling off the layers of waterproof clothing they would be hurrying to get back on when the big black clouds broke open midway through the afternoon. It finally happened roundabout the very moment Bob MacIntyre was walking off the 18th green to sign for his 66, five under for the round, and the championship, and three shots off the clubhouse lead. MacIntyre is 28, but an old hand around these links. He knew he needed to make birdies while the sun was shining and picked up six of them altogether, with just the one bogey at the 16th where his tee shot caught on the hillside by the green. He was playing with Bryson DeChambeau, who had a hell of a time himself. DeChambeau followed the 78 he made on the opening day with a 65, which meant he had put together his worst and best rounds at the Open on successive days. He was as perplexed by it as everyone else. 'That's links golf for you,' he said. 'I didn't feel like I played any differently. Today just kind of went more my way.' DeChambeau's got a scientific mind, he said earlier in the week that his ideal practice ground would be a 400m-long tunnel in which he can control the wind, and he clearly finds the inconsistencies of the links completely infuriating. 'When it gets as chaotic as this, with the wind going every which way, you have to be a golfer that pivots on demand,' he said. Which isn't much good when you're a man who likes to hit 400 balls in a single session on the range by way of practice for a major. He explained he had spent a day preparing for a left-to-right wind on 18, only to find, once he got there, that it was blowing the other way altogether. He did well to make the cut, and better to control his temper. 'I was proud of the way I fought back and persevered through some emotionally difficult moments, and to hold myself together and not get pissed and slam clubs and throw things and all that like I wanted to.' MacIntyre might just have told him to let himself go. He threw plenty of silent oaths himself, most of them after putts that stayed up. They made an odd pair. DeChambeau, just over 6ft, square-shouldered, shaped like a linebacker, looks like he's been carved out of marble. In between shots, his body seems to fall like it's been positioned for him by a sculptor. MacIntyre, on the other hand, is built like the bloke working the till in the chippie. If you didn't know already, you'd burn through a whole lot of guesses before you got to what he does for his living. He's good at it though, especially out here on the links where he whistles the ball in, out and around the wind with that slouchy, left-handed swing of his. MacIntyre grew up playing this sort of golf around Oban, just the other side of the North Channel. Royal Portrush is one of his favourite courses, he finished sixth on his major debut here back in 2019, and the kinship between the two countries means the locals here love him like one of their own. He and DeChambeau hadn't much to do with each other till they were drawn together this week, but they seemed to enjoy each other's company, maybe because they are such contrasting characters. MacIntyre plays by feel, DeChambeau by theory. 'We're two completely different golfers,' MacIntyre said. He was out there playing with a 10-year-old three wood which he dug out of the back of a cupboard at home. 'I actually thought that club broke in 2020 at Abu Dhabi,' he said. 'But I was searching for a three wood and I went back into the cupboard and looked at the antiques.' Turns out it still works. DeChambeau, on the other hand, revealed after his round that he is currently working on a top-secret project to reinvent the golf ball. He said that his model 'will be here, worst-case scenario, in September'. 'He's obviously got his way of doing it,' said MacIntyre. 'But to be honest, golf's going closer to his approach now, with all the science and biomechanics, and everything. But yeah, I'll just keep playing golf my way.' Justin Rose made up the trio. These days he plays the sort of brisk, businesslike golf of a man who knows he's on the clock and wants to make the most of the hours he has. He's 44 now and, 12 years on from his victory in the US Open at Merion, has finished runner-up five times in the majors. But he is way back in this one, after his round was blighted by a triple-bogey at the 11th.

The National
an hour ago
- The National
Scottie Scheffler leads by one at halfway stage of The Open
While she offered up some bursts of pleasant weather on day two of the 153rd championship, she also hurled down a few frightful downpours that left everything so damp, there was just about moss growing on this correspondent's brolly. The sight, meanwhile, of Scottie Scheffler moving to the top of the leaderboard late in the evening was such an ominous sign for the rest of the title challengers, it should've been accompanied by a yellow warning from the Met Office. With a sparkling seven-under 64, the best of the day, the world No 1 reached the 10-under mark and will take a one-shot lead into the weekend over Matthew Fitzpatrick with the 2023 Open champion, Brian Harman, and Haotong Li a stroke further back on eight-under. Catch me if you can. Scheffler was superb. The three-time major winner got himself up-and-running with four birdies over his first seven holes in a thrust which included three in a row from the fifth. As the evening drew on, the 29-year-old delivered a late salvo as he made his assault on the summit. He trundled in a 17-footer for birdie on the 16th to move into a tie at the top before fortifying his position with another birdie putt from a similar distance on the 17th. Given his dominance these days, many would've predicted Scheffler to be exactly where he is on the order. At least he's easier to predict than fickle Mother Nature. 'It was super sunny when we were on the driving range,' said the reigning PGA champion. 'We get to the first hole, it's still sunny. Then all of a sudden, you look around and it's super dark and it starts pouring with rain.' It didn't dampen Scheffler's parade, though. Fitzpatrick, the former US Open champion who is returning to form after a prolonged spell in the doldrums, had hoisted himself into the lead during his inward half as the to-ing and fro-ing at the sharp end of affairs intensified. On the 17th, he had a birdie putt from a couple of feet to increase his advantage to two. But he missed. On the 18th, Fitzpatrick faced a 23-footer to save par. And he knocked it in. It's a daft auld game, isn't it? 'Obviously disappointed on 17, but to roll one in on 18 was a huge bonus,' said the Sheffield man after a 66 left him sitting on a nine-under aggregate and in the hunt to become the first English champion since Nick Faldo in 1992. 'I'm giving myself an opportunity to win the golf tournament, but there's still a hell of a long way to go.' There sure is. Harman looks like he could be in it for the long haul after a delightfully assembled 65 for eight-under. The 38-year-old never looked in trouble as he put in the kind of controlled, polished display that was a hallmark of his mighty victory at a sodden Hoylake two years ago. 'I had to get up-and-down on 11 and made about a six-footer for par and that's the hardest putt I had,' he said of a stress-free day at the office. If it's fireworks you're after, then Harman is not really your man. 'It's a very boring approach that I take,' he added of a considered strategy that can be as methodical as moving chess pieces. 'I'm not trying to be heroic or do anything crazy. I know that I've got the game to do it. It's just a matter of executing and staying in my own head.' In his Open debut at Birkdale back in 2017, Li came roaring up the order on the final day with a 63 to claim third place. Forty-six years earlier, the colourful, charismatic Lu Liang Huan, known affectionately as Mr Lu, finished second to Lee Trevino over the same Birkdale links in 1971. Here at Portrush in 2025, it's a Mr Li who is hoping to go one better. The 29-year-old from China is certainly not intimated by the company he is keeping. 'If I play my best again, I can compete with anyone,' said Li after a 67 kept him right in the thick of it. It's an intriguing leaderboard. Oban's Robert MacIntyre is nicely placed on five-under in a posse that also includes Tyrrell Hatton and the new Scottish Open champion, Chris Gotterup. His splendid 65 was illuminated by a brace of eagles at the second and 12th. Sibling rivalry is to the fore with Danish twins, Rasmus and Nicolai Hojgaard, both sitting in the top-10. Rory McIlroy is perched on the three-under mark. Shane Lowry, the Open champion here in 2019, was given a two-shot penalty after he was judged to have caused his ball to move with a practice swing on the 12th. Lowry still made the cut, but his mood was darker than some of Mother Nature's clouds.


The Herald Scotland
an hour ago
- The Herald Scotland
Scottie Scheffler leads by one at halfway stage of The Open
The sight, meanwhile, of Scottie Scheffler moving to the top of the leaderboard late in the evening was such an ominous sign for the rest of the title challengers, it should've been accompanied by a yellow warning from the Met Office. With a sparkling seven-under 64, the best of the day, the world No 1 reached the 10-under mark and will take a one-shot lead into the weekend over Matthew Fitzpatrick with the 2023 Open champion, Brian Harman, and Haotong Li a stroke further back on eight-under. Catch me if you can. Scheffler was superb. The three-time major winner got himself up-and-running with four birdies over his first seven holes in a thrust which included three in a row from the fifth. As the evening drew on, the 29-year-old delivered a late salvo as he made his assault on the summit. He trundled in a 17-footer for birdie on the 16th to move into a tie at the top before fortifying his position with another birdie putt from a similar distance on the 17th. Given his dominance these days, many would've predicted Scheffler to be exactly where he is on the order. At least he's easier to predict than fickle Mother Nature. 'It was super sunny when we were on the driving range,' said the reigning PGA champion. 'We get to the first hole, it's still sunny. Then all of a sudden, you look around and it's super dark and it starts pouring with rain.' It didn't dampen Scheffler's parade, though. Fitzpatrick, the former US Open champion who is returning to form after a prolonged spell in the doldrums, had hoisted himself into the lead during his inward half as the to-ing and fro-ing at the sharp end of affairs intensified. On the 17th, he had a birdie putt from a couple of feet to increase his advantage to two. But he missed. On the 18th, Fitzpatrick faced a 23-footer to save par. And he knocked it in. It's a daft auld game, isn't it? 'Obviously disappointed on 17, but to roll one in on 18 was a huge bonus,' said the Sheffield man after a 66 left him sitting on a nine-under aggregate and in the hunt to become the first English champion since Nick Faldo in 1992. 'I'm giving myself an opportunity to win the golf tournament, but there's still a hell of a long way to go.' There sure is. Harman looks like he could be in it for the long haul after a delightfully assembled 65 for eight-under. The 38-year-old never looked in trouble as he put in the kind of controlled, polished display that was a hallmark of his mighty victory at a sodden Hoylake two years ago. 'I had to get up-and-down on 11 and made about a six-footer for par and that's the hardest putt I had,' he said of a stress-free day at the office. If it's fireworks you're after, then Harman is not really your man. 'It's a very boring approach that I take,' he added of a considered strategy that can be as methodical as moving chess pieces. 'I'm not trying to be heroic or do anything crazy. I know that I've got the game to do it. It's just a matter of executing and staying in my own head.' In his Open debut at Birkdale back in 2017, Li came roaring up the order on the final day with a 63 to claim third place. Forty-six years earlier, the colourful, charismatic Lu Liang Huan, known affectionately as Mr Lu, finished second to Lee Trevino over the same Birkdale links in 1971. Here at Portrush in 2025, it's a Mr Li who is hoping to go one better. The 29-year-old from China is certainly not intimated by the company he is keeping. 'If I play my best again, I can compete with anyone,' said Li after a 67 kept him right in the thick of it. It's an intriguing leaderboard. Oban's Robert MacIntyre is nicely placed on five-under in a posse that also includes Tyrrell Hatton and the new Scottish Open champion, Chris Gotterup. His splendid 65 was illuminated by a brace of eagles at the second and 12th. Sibling rivalry is to the fore with Danish twins, Rasmus and Nicolai Hojgaard, both sitting in the top-10. Rory McIlroy is perched on the three-under mark. Shane Lowry, the Open champion here in 2019, was given a two-shot penalty after he was judged to have caused his ball to move with a practice swing on the 12th. Lowry still made the cut, but his mood was darker than some of Mother Nature's clouds.